News Release
ETC Group
7 June 2007
www.etcgroup.org

Patenting Pandora's Bug

J. Craig Venter Institute Seeks Monopoly Patents 

ETC Group Will Challenge Patents on "Synthia" -
Original Syn Organism  
Created in Laboratory

Ten years after Dolly the cloned sheep made her
stunning debut, the  
J. Craig Venter Institute is applying for a patent on
a new  
biological bombshell - the world's first-ever
human-made species. The  
novel bacterium is made entirely with synthetic DNA in
the laboratory.

The Venter Institute - named for its founder and CEO,
J. Craig  
Venter, the scientist who led the private sector race
to map the  
Human Genome - is applying for worldwide patents on
what they refer  
to as "Mycoplasma laboratorium." In the tradition of
'Dolly,' ETC has  
nicknamed this synthetic organism (or 'syn')
'Synthia.'

"Synthia may not be as cuddly as a cloned lamb, but we
believe this  
is a much bigger deal," explains Jim Thomas of ETC
Group, a civil  
society organization that is calling on the world's
patent offices to  
reject the applications. "These monopoly claims signal
the start of a  
high-stakes commercial race to synthesize and
privatize synthetic  
life forms. Will Venter's company become the
'Microbesoft' of  
synthetic biology?" asks Jim Thomas.

"For the first time, God has competition," adds Pat
Mooney of ETC  
Group. "Venter and his colleagues have breached a
societal boundary,  
and the public hasn't even had a chance to debate the
far-reaching  
social, ethical and environmental implications of
synthetic life,"  
said Mooney.

In Vivo, In Vitro, In-Venter? Published on May 31,
2007, the Venter  
Institute's US Patent application (number 20070122826)
claims  
exclusive ownership of a set of essential genes and a
synthetic "free- 
living organism that can grow and replicate" that is
made using those  
genes. The Venter Institute has also filed an
international patent  
application at the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO  
number WO2007047148, published April 27, 2007) which
names more than  
100 countries where it may seek monopoly patents.

Pandora pending: Patent experts consulted by ETC Group
indicate that,  
based on the language used in the application, the
Venter Institute  
researchers had probably not achieved a
fully-functioning organism at  
the time of the filing (October 12, 2006).

"It has been eight months since the Institute applied
for its  
patents, so we don't know how much progress they've
made, whether  
there is a scientific paper in press or how imminent
the first  
synthetic species is," said Pat Mooney of ETC Group.
"We've been  
hearing for more than two years now that Venter is on
the verge of  
announcing the birth of a new bacterium. Many people
think Venter's  
company has the scientific expertise to do the job,"
said Mooney.

Venter's Institute claims that its stripped-down
microbe could be the  
key to cheap energy production. The patent application
claims any  
version of "Synthia" that can make ethanol or
hydrogen. Since the  
research was partially funded by the US Department of
Energy, the US  
government will hold "certain rights" to the patent,
if approved.

"It's purely speculation and hype that syns [synthetic
living  
organisms] will be used to ameliorate climate change
by producing  
cheap ethanol or hydrogen," said Jim Thomas. "The same
minimal  
microbe could be harnessed to build a virulent
pathogen that could  
pose grave threats to people and the planet," he said.

"Synthetic biologists have already assembled the
poliovirus from off- 
the-shelf DNA, a feat that its constructor called 'a
giant wake up  
call' because of the biowarfare implications. Syns are
being hyped as  
a green, climate-change solution in order to deflect
concerns that  
they could be used as bioweapons," adds Silvia Ribeiro
of ETC Group.

The patent application is also a wake-up call to
synthetic biologists  
who are advocating for "open source" biology - the
idea that the  
fundamental tools and components of synthetic biology
should be  
freely accessible to researchers. In the June 4 issue
of Newsweek  
Craig Venter boasts, "If we made an organism that
produced fuel, that  
could be the first billion- or trillion-dollar
organism. We would  
definitely patent that whole process." In 2005, Venter
founded  
Synthetic Genomics, Inc. to commercialize synthetic
microbes for use  
in energy, agriculture and climate change remediation.

Syn of Omission? Synthetic biologists may also be
dismayed to learn  
that Synthia is being patented for what it is not. The
patent  
application explains that the inventors arrived at
their minimal  
genome by determining which genes are essential and
which are not.  
Remarkably, their patent application claims any
synthetically- 
constructed organism that lacks at least 55 of 101
genes that they've  
determined are non-essential. "All synthetic
biologists developing  
functionalized microbes are going to have to pay close
attention to  
the claim on a 'non-essential' set of genes. If
someone creates  
another bug that lacks some of the same genes that
Synthia lacks,  
will the Venter Institute sue them for infringing its
patent?" asks  
Kathy Jo Wetter of ETC Group.

Action Needed: Before syns are allowed to go forward,
society must  
debate whether they are socially acceptable or
desirable: How could  
their accidental release into the environment be
prevented or the  
effects of their intentional release be evaluated? Who
will control  
them, and how? How will research be regulated? In 2006
a coalition of  
38 civil society organizations called on synthetic
biologists to  
withdraw proposals for self-governance of the
technology.

Today, ETC Group is writing to Dr. J. Craig Venter,
CEO of the J.  
Craig Venter Institute, asking him to withdraw the
Institute's patent  
applications filed at the U.S. PTO and WIPO, pending a
full public  
debate over the implications of creating synthetic
life forms.

"We don't want to engage in a long-term legal strategy
to slap down  
bad patents. These patents must be struck down before
they're  
issued," said ETC Group's Hope Shand. Last month, ETC
Group won its  
13-year legal challenge when the European Patent
Office revoked  
Monsanto's species-wide soybean patent.
http://www.etcgroup.org/en/materials/publications.html?pub_id=619

ETC is also writing to WIPO and the U.S. PTO, asking
them to reject  
the patent on the grounds that it is contrary to ordre
public (public  
morality and safety). Later this month ETC Group will
attend  
Synthetic Biology 3.0 (an international conference of
synthetic  
biologists) in Zuerich, Switzerland June 24-26 where
it will call  
upon scientists to join in a global dialogue on
synthetic biology.  
ETC will organize meetings with governments and civil
society during  
the upcoming scientific subcommittee meetings of the
UN Convention on  
Biological Diversity (CBD) in Paris, July 2-6, in
order to discuss  
the implications of the creation of synthetic life
forms for the  
Biodiversity Convention and for its protocol on
biosafety. ETC Group  
will convene a global meeting of civil society actors
on this and  
related issues within the next year.

Notes to Editors: See backgrounder.
http://www.etcgroup.org/upload/publication/pdf_file2/631

For further information:

Jim Thomas (Montreal) [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: 1 514 271
2539

Pat Mooney (Ottawa) [EMAIL PROTECTED] Mobile: +1 613
261 0688

Silvia Ribeiro (Mexico) [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: + 52
5555 6326 64

Kathy Jo Wetter (North Carolina) [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel:
+1 919 960-5223

Hope Shand (North Carolina) [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tel: +1
919 960-5223
_______________________________________________
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http://lists.etcgroup.org/mailman/listinfo/etcgroup




      
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